Ward & Fontenot
Pontotoc
County, Oklahoma
Date of Crime: April 28, 1984
Tommy Ward and Karl Fontenot were convicted of murdering
Denice Haraway. Haraway, 24, worked part-time at McAnally's
convenience store in Ada, Oklahoma. She was last seen leaving the
store with a man who had his arm around her waist. The two appeared to
be a pair of lovers. The store was found deserted with the cash
register drawer opened and emptied. Haraway's purse and driver's
license were found inside, and her car nearby.
Months later, with Haraway still missing, police questioned Tommy Ward, who
resembled the man who had accompanied Haraway from the store. After
days of interrogation, Ward confessed to the crime. He also implicated
his friend, Karl Fontenot, and Odell Titsworth, a man he never met. During the videotaped confession, Ward frequently forgot Titsworth's name
and called him “Titsdale.” Ward said the three gang-raped Haraway,
murdered her with Titsworth's knife, and dumped her body near Sandy Creek. Fontenot was soon arrested and confessed after only two hours of
interrogation. His confession was similar to Ward's but contradicted
it many details, like the order in which the three raped Haraway, or the
location and number of stab wounds on her. Fontenot said the three
brought Haraway into an abandoned house where Titsworth poured gasoline over
her body and burned down the house. Ward had mentioned a burned down
house in an earlier unrecorded confession, and police knew it existed.
Titsworth was arrested, but he had broken his arm two days before Haraway's
abduction in a fight with police. Medical and police records made him
an unlikely suspect, and he was never charged with murder. While
police were sifting through the remains of the burned down house, the owner
appeared. After police told him of Fontenot's confession, the owner
said Fontenot's story was impossible, as he himself had burned down the
house 10 months before Haraway went missing.
At trial, the prosecutor presented the confessions and was forced into the
position of telling the jury the defendants were lying about details while
asking the jury to believe them anyway. Two jailhouse informants
supplemented the confessions. One said Ward confessed, while the other
said he overheard Fontenot talking to himself, saying, “I knew we'd get
caught. I knew we'd get caught.” The jurors returned with guilty
verdicts and death penalties.
Haraway's body was found four months later in Hughes County, far from
anyplace that was searched. She had not been stabbed or burned, but
died from a single gunshot to the head. The case attracted the
attention of a New York journalist, Robert Mayer, who published a book about
the case entitled
The Dreams of Ada. [1/07]
________________________________
Source:
The Innocent Man Reference:
The Dreams of Ada
Posted in:
Victims of the State,
Oklahoma Cases,
Inconsistent Confessions, Murder Cases Without a
Body, Favorite Case Stories
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